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Review: the new Soho Lounge (for BA Gold cardholders) at New York JFK Terminal 8

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This is our review of the brand new Soho Lounge at New York JFK’s Terminal 8, which is now the British Airways terminal.

The Soho Lounge is the mid-tier lounge for British Airways and American Airlines passengers from the airport. As you’ll see it is anything but ‘mid-tier’ and could easily be confused with a ‘real’ First Class lounge.

The Soho Lounge is one of two new lounges at Terminal 8, which have opened in order to accommodate the increase in passengers following the move by British Aiways from T7 to T8. Click here to see my review of the Chelsea Lounge, which is the top-tier lounge facility in the terminal and replaces the British Airways Concorde Room.

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

A third lounge, called the Greenwich Lounge, will cater to business class passengers and British Airways Silver card holders, plus oneworld equivalents. This is not a new lounge but a rebrand of the existing AA Flagship Lounge.

As these lounges are a joint venture between American Airlines and British Airways they have been named – as you may have spotted – after three shared neighbourhoods between New York and London.

I was given a tour of the Soho Lounge on Tuesday, two days before it opened to the public.

How to access the Soho Lounge at New York JFK Terminal 8

Entry requirements for the Soho Lounge are a bit of an odd one, because all ‘real’ British Airways and American Airlines First Class passengers will be using the more exclusive Chelsea Lounge next door.

However, if you are flying First Class on another oneworld airline, such as Japan Airlines, you will end up in the Soho Lounge.

Fundamentally, the Soho Lounge caters for top British Airways and American Airlines status cardholders, regardless of their class of travel. It is effectively a British Airways Gold status lounge.

The following people get access:

  • BA Gold cardholders
  • AAdvantage Executive Platinum members, if travelling in Flagship
  • AAdvantage Platinum Pro members, if travelling in Flagship
  • oneworld First Class passengers
  • oneworld Emerald members

As you can see, unlike the Chelsea Lounge, the Soho Lounge also caters for oneworld frequent flyers.

The lounge is open all day from 4:30am until 12:30am.

Where is the Soho Lounge at JFK Terminal 8?

The Soho Lounge is in a new extension to the terminal. It is very easy to get to, especially as JFK Terminal 8 is not as big as Terminal 5 at Heathrow.

It is directly opposite Gate 14. Just turn right as you exit security and you’ll see the signage. You need to take the lifts or the stairs up a floor.

Review Chelsea Lounge British Airways First Class New York JFK Airport Terminal 8

The Soho Lounge is co-located with the Chelsea Lounge. You’ll see a bank of check-in desks for the Soho Lounge, which is straight ahead of you as you exit the lifts:

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

Inside BA and AA’s new Soho Lounge at Terminal 8

Inside the British Airways and American Airlines Soho Lounge you’ll find a large, light-filled space. This is a mid-size lounge with a capacity of 282 guests across 1,200 square metres.

Whilst the lounge is more or less one open space, it has been separated into individual zones that are functionally and stylistically different.

The first thing you’ll see as you enter is a staffed bar behind a casual dining area with forest green seating:

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

Next to this you’ll find a more formal dining area, around a centrepiece glass chandelier installation:

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

and

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

Straddling an internal wall is a large buffet area where you can help yourself to food and drinks. As I was there for a pre-opening tour this was not yet in use and I couldn’t see what was on offer.

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

On the opposite side, and along the window, you’ll find a raft of armchairs in groups of four overlooking the tarmac. When I was there, a British Airways plane had just landed and parked at Gate 14 downstairs:

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

Beyond this, tucked right into the corner, you’ll also find five individual open booths. These aren’t phone booths (there are a couple of those elsewhere) but they do afford you additional privacy.

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

and

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

After the dining area you’ll find another space with higher bar-stool style seating and a large hot-desking table made from petrified wood:

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

There are also two phone booths here.

As you can see there are plug sockets galore, with multiple options at almost every seat:

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

The final space is the most private of all and screened off from the rest of the lounge as I think it’s meant to be more of a quiet area. This is a cosy ‘library’ area (although there are no books!)

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

and

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

Around the corner are the bathrooms as well as four showers. I was pleased to see these are identical to the showers in the Chelsea Lounge, so you won’t be disappointed:

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

Toiletries are again by DS & DURGA.

Review: Soho Lounge (for British Airways Gold) at New York JFK airport Terminal 8

Food and drink in the Soho Lounge, JFK Airport

Whilst no food was out during my lounge tour, I did manage to take a look at the menus.

As a reminder, there is a self-serve buffet. As far as I know, there is no a la carte menu, unless BA and AA decide to bring QR code ordering as they have at Heathrow.

There is a separate breakfast and ‘all day’ menu. On the ‘all day’ menu you have a choice of:

  • Honey and roasted garlic chicken (hot)
  • Miso pomegranate salmon (hot)
  • Drip pan fingerling potatoes with herbs (hot)
  • Coffee bean roasted heirloom carrots (hot)
  • Runner bean and pesto trofie (hot)
  • BYO salad bar
  • Pre-made salads, including cobb, nicoise, waldorf and superfood salads
  • Roasted tomato soup (hot)
  • Chicken noodle soup (hot)
  • Yoghurt station
  • Charcuterie station
  • Desserts such as cookies, brownies, lemon bars

It’s good to see there are no sad looking pasta dishes with the thinnest coating of sauces. Let’s see what it looks like in practice.

Conclusion

This is an impressive lounge, despite being the mid-tier offering and a notch down from the Chelsea Lounge next door.

In fact, I think you’d be hard pressed, from a design stand point, to tell the difference as both are reminiscent of high-end hotels. You can easily forget you are at an airport.

The Soho Lounge is bigger, of course, and it benefits from floor to ceiling windows along its length. It also features a self-serve buffet versus the Chelsea’s a la carte dining. You don’t have a choice of 17 champagnes either!

It is a night and day difference compared to its equivalent in London, the Heathrow and Gatwick Galleries First lounges. Taken together, the new British Airways and American Airlines lounges at Terminal 8 have got to be with the best, if not the best lounges at New York’s JFK Airport.


Getting airport lounge access for free from a credit card

How to get FREE airport lounge access via UK credit cards (April 2024)

Here are the four options to get FREE airport lounge access via a UK credit card.

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with two free Priority Pass cards, one for you and one for a supplementary cardholder. Each card admits two so a family of four gets in free. You get access to all 1,300 lounges in the Priority Pass network – search it here.

You also get access to Eurostar, Lufthansa and Delta Air Lines lounges.  Our American Express Platinum review is here. You can apply here.

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If you have a small business, consider American Express Business Platinum instead.

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for the first year. It comes with a Priority Pass card loaded with four free visits to any Priority Pass lounge – see the list here.

Additional lounge visits are charged at £24.  You get four more free visits for every year you keep the card.  

There is no annual fee for Amex Gold in Year 1 and you get a 20,000 points sign-up bonus.  Full details are in our American Express Preferred Rewards Gold review here.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard gets you get a free Priority Pass card, allowing you access to the Priority Pass network.  Guests are charged at £24 although it may be cheaper to pay £60 for a supplementary credit card for your partner.

The card has a fee of £195 and there are strict financial requirements to become a HSBC Premier customer.  Full details are in my HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard review.

HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard

A huge bonus, but only available to HSBC Premier clients Read our full review

PS. You can find all of HfP’s UK airport lounge reviews – and we’ve been to most of them – indexed here.

Comments (68)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Adam says:

    Looks like a great place to spend time. What’s the toilet to passenger capacity ratio? I think we need some data points to start lobbying BA about the situation in T5 Flounge !

  • Andrew J says:

    So the food is basically chicken or salmon with potatoes and carrots or a salad – what an extensive and inspiring selection!

    • Save East Coast Rewards says:

      It seems ok to me even though they’ve used lengthy descriptions to make it sound more! For example the charcuterie selection will have a bunch of cold meats and hopefully the salad bar will be good (I assume BYO is build your own and not bring your own!)

    • Harry T says:

      I’ve never had good food in any BA lounge, just average to poor. This includes the Flounges and CCR.

      • Andrew J says:

        The only food that was reasonable in my experience was the CCR at JFK.

      • Russell G says:

        I’m starting to wonder whether all the derogatory comments about BA lounges are commenters attempts at crowd control (a motive I’d completely respect!)!

        I spend my life travelling around the worlds top restaurants and yes, CCR is not Michelin starred dining level, but describing it as “average to poor” is just wrong.

        • JDB says:

          The food in the CCR is very much “average to poor”. Breakfast is OK, but the rest of it is not and certainly isn’t food one would ever contemplate paying for and is so far removed from Michelin guide entry that mention of it is extraordinary. The excellent wines are its only saving grace; a particularly good white Saint Romain last week.

          • David says:

            🥱

          • Harry T says:

            Agree with JDB, if you think the Flounge or CCR food is good then are a very generous and kind person, who probably hasn’t visited another OneWorld business or first lounge. For example, in the last few months, I would say that LHR CX F and QF J have been vastly superior to BA. LAX QF F makes the CCR food look like a charity soup kitchen. AY business lounge and platinum wing again massively better than BA. And I’ve been in the BA Flounge at LHR a fair bit to compare.

  • planeconcorde says:

    Typo:”The first think….” should be “The first thing…”

  • Save East Coast Rewards says:

    “Gatwick Galleries First lounges”

    There’s no Galleries First in Gatwick. The Galleries branding had stopped well before BA moved into the south terminal.

    These new lounges look excellent but I wonder if they will keep up the catering standards in a few months time. The offering in Galleries First at LHR isn’t particularly good at the moment.

    • Rhys says:

      They look like Galleries lounges though even if they’re not called that!

    • AJA says:

      If the Galleries branding has ended is it just at LGW? If not why do you then contradict yourself and say “The offering in Galleries First at LHR” ? 😀

      • Save East Coast Rewards says:

        Around the time of the bmi acquisition BA stopped with the Galleries branding so all subsequently opened lounges were just branded ‘British Airways Lounge’

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Because the lounges at LHR ARE galleries lounges.

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    Staffed bar could be good but is that totally free drinks or is is more like free for non / lesser premium brands and $$$ for premium brands like in an Admirals Club?

    And will it be normal drinks only like GnT or will there be a long wait whilst someone orders half a dozen cosmo or Long Island ice teas? If there is also a free pour area then that would make a difference.

    I’m sort of torn at the moment. I’ve been impressed by the flagship lounge in the past so hopefully SoHo will be a real step up rather than just the slightly better it seems to be from your description..

    • Andrew J says:

      No mention of the champagne brand – the most important thing to HFP readers!

    • TGLoyalty says:

      The bar in the old T7 J lounge was proper cocktails. No idea if they’ll differentiate between BA/AA customers in this one or everyone gets the same but I’m sure the J lounge will be a step down

    • Rhys says:

      I believe there’s going to be self-serve wine etc too. Bar probably more for cocktails etc

  • Hardy says:

    Only US style plugs. Seems kinda stupid at an international airline lounge…. gateway to the world, but only if you have a US style plug.

    • Andrew. says:

      If you’ve got that far, you’ve probably got an adapter.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        You say that but I was transiting CDG and completely forgot to pack a euro plug

        Also when I’m packing to leave I often forget about the airport so my adapters would be in my hold luggage.

        It’s a big miss for any international airport not to have some universal plugs.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      Looks to be USB ports as well.

    • John G says:

      They have USB-C pors. As vurtually every laptop and phone will be powered that way before long I don’t see an issue.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Very much doubt they have the power to charge a laptop. Phone yes.

    • Tom says:

      My first thought on looking at the plugs was similar, particularly odd there aren’t UK sockets. Decor looks nice. Does “BYO salad bar” not mean there isn’t a salad bar?

    • Hardy says:

      It’s more of a ” they’ve spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to build the lounge if not a million or something, why save pennies on a international socket.” It’s just future proofing the lounge. I’m not asking wireless charging here, just a simple common sense thing. If it was just a facelift of a lounge then understandable. In fact im surprised no wireless charging either.

  • Andrew. says:

    Passed through T8 last night, security was a miserable experience. Seemed a bit overwhelmed. Doesn’t help that different queues have different equipment so it’s follow different rules – all being shouted out.

    (I wasn’t in the lounges.)

    • Rhys says:

      Sounds standard for US airports to be honest…

    • SamG says:

      Was my first go using my Pre Check and I was very grateful, “normal” security looked pretty busy and I doubt yesterday was a particularly busy day for AA departures, around holidays etc you’ll need to allow plenty of time

  • Mikeact says:

    BA should consider the Delta app option..four levels from ..lounge not busy to extremely busy.

    • Russell G says:

      You mean like they have at T5 where 3/5 means standing room only apparently! 😀

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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